Napalm Beach shows in Seattle 1983-88

Again, this is research done by threebandsthreebucks.blogspot.com Based on what I see here, the clubs in Seattle linked most closely to the Sub Pop bands were the Vogue and Central Tavern.

Metropolis

1983

August 6 – John Cale, Memory, Napalm Beach

November 26 – D.O.A. Fastbacks, Spluii Numa, Richard Peterson (This is the lineup on the flyer. The Rocket has Napalm Beach on the bill but not Spluii Numa or Richard Peterson)

(Nov 25 and Nov 30 both feature Minneapolis bands – Bohemia and The Replacements)

1984

February 11 – Napalm Beach (PDX), Los Mexicans, Idle Worship, DSML

March 6 – LAST SHOW – Alien Sex Fiend (London), Red Masque, 3 Squirrels From Hell

Napalm Beach at Golden Crown Aug 31 poster

Golden Crown (1985)

1985

August 2-3 – Napalm Beach, The Icons

August 31 – Napalm Beach, Baba Yaga

Gorilla Gardens (1985)

1985

June 7 – Napalm Beach, Young Pioneers, Noon Moon, Bundle Of Hiss, 69 Ways

Closed down at the end of 1985 after a “riot” and underage drinking at 11/26/85 Circle Jerks show

Graven Image Gallery (1984)

1984

July 14 – Pell Mell, Napalm Beach

Ditto Tavern (1985-87)

1985

December 13 – Napalm Beach

1986

February 10 – Napalm Beach
June 6 – Napalm Beach

Central Tavern

Dayglow Abortions, Napalm Beach, Cheatin' Death at Central Tavern poster

3bands3$ says “I chose to start my research in 1986, the year when the Central became much more than just a typical Pioneer Square club, thanks to the efforts of booking gods Jan Gregor, Terry Lee Hale, and others.” The club changed owners, and changed direction in booking, in 1990.

1986

January 3-4 – Jackals, Napalm Beach (Jackals played this club a lot.)
September 16 – Napalm Beach
October 4 – Dayglow Abortions, Napalm Beach, Cheatin’ Death
October 18 – Saccharine Trust, Napalm Beach, Skin Yard
November 6 – Napalm Beach, No Tomorrow

1987

Claudia Facebook post on Aug 25, 1987
Claudia Gehke

March 27 – Napalm Beach, F-Holes
August 14 – MIA, Napalm Beach
December 18 – Snow Bud & The Flower People, F-Holes, Dead Moon
Note: site states that Green River broke up in November 1987

1988

December 16 – Napalm Beach, Big Tube Squeezer, Terry Lee Hale

Vogue

1985

July 19 – Napalm Beach
November 27 – Napalm Beach

1987

April 15 – Napalm Beach, White Boys
August 25 – H-Hour, Napalm Beach, Bundy Creature (Claudia Gehrke’s birthday party)

1988

Snow Bud at the Vogue
Snow Bud at the Vogue – this is labeled 1986 but it may be 87 – Sam Henry (Wipers, Napalm Beach) is playing bass and Andrew Loomis (Dead Moon) is on drums

February 28 – Sub Pop Sunday w/ Snow Bud & The Flower People
June 29 – Napalm Beach (PDX), Coffin Break

Squid Row

1988

August 26 Snowbud & The Flower People, Girl Trouble, Bundy Creature (Claudia Gehrke’s birthday party)

Snow Bud Sub Pop Sunday at Vogue
Snow Bud Sub Pop

Slowing the roll – Portland, Seattle club scene breakdown in 1983 and appearance of Satyricon

I can parse the series of music-related set ups in Chris’ life going back to 1967. However, right now I’m focused on the 1980s, especially the Sub Pop era.

I’ve been trying to think of Pacific northwest punk bands who were touring early before 1987. The only ones I can think of are Wipers, Beat Happening, Go Team, D.O.A. – and Pell Mell? Green River toured beginning in 1985.

Pell Mell with Wipers at Evergreen Experimental Theater 13 July 1984

A lot of times people don’t include D.O.A. with these other bands maybe because they were from Vancouver B.C. or because, generally speaking, artificial divisions are made in the northwest music scene where they shouldn’t be made, almost certainly to misdirect attention.

D.O.A. – like Black Flag, the LA band with whom they shared a member – was a popular hardcore punk band on the move.

Wipers, from Portland, was Greg Sage. Sage was linked to the all ages punk scene, to Pell Mell (Steve Fisk, Bruce Pavitt), and Napalm Beach. I don’t know, but I suspect Sage was linked more generally to K Records, Evergreen State College and the all ages punk scene. Wipers was one of the Portland bands who were liked in Olympia. (Dead Moon was another.)

There are things about Greg Sage that tell you he has some kind of background in, for lack of a better term, mind control activity (hypnosis, covert manipulations, etc). It’s in his sound (hypnotic drum loops, etc) and in the messaging he conveyed. This is true of a lot of people around Chris and me – especially those closest to us. How these people were trained to handle us, and who trained and/or handles them, I don’t know. The mind control activities do seem to be linked to bigger record labels and movie studios (I.E. the Hollywood entertainment business), and financial activity. Part of Greg Sage’s job was trapping Chris (thus the hidden in plain sight name of his first label – Trap Records) in the local scene. To this end, I suspect he coordinated with a number of other people and financial entities.

Beat Happening (Olympia) was of course linked to K Records, KAOS Radio/Evergreen, Pavitt/Sub Pop zine/label, and the all ages scene. Go Team (Olympia) was linked to Beat Happening, K Records, Bikini Kill zine/band, and the all ages scene. Part of the misdirecting used by bands like Beat Happening (and all of these bands, really) was an overt eschewing of anything corporate or “sell out.” That seems to have been a psychological technique to make it seem like being small and unknown and not standing out was “cooler” than being successful and “corporate”, and it was also a form of misdirection. I suspect all of these acts were involved in a number of subterranean financial transactions.

Peter Gabriel - Big Time - 1987

D.O.A. (Vancouver, B.C.) was linked to Black Flag (L.A.), the Dead Kennedys (S.F.) and the Seattle club scene. Chris remembered Joey Keithley from D.O.A. giving him a hard time because Untouchables formed in 1980 and therefore were latecomers to punk (D.O.A. were hardcore punk) – this is part of an ongoing pattern of psychological baiting that dogged Chris his whole life. Again with the arbitrary divisions – are you from Portland or are you from Olympia or are you from Seattle? Did your band form before or after 1979? Are you pre-grunge, proto-grunge, grunge, or post grunge? And so on.

It is not clear to me how Wipers, Beat Happening, etc managed, financially, to tour.

One thing about the situation around Chris and me is that it is highly controlled, and in fact our families have been highly controlled for generations. It’s done in such a way as to give people a modicum of power as long as they provide support to the system overall. The system works by tempting, enticing, entrapping, enslaving, threatening, coercing, baiting, lying, deceiving, changing the rules, etc – whatever it takes. There are layers of power/authority and layers of protection. One of the means of protection is financial connections. Another is getting as many people involved as possible in the various schemes, and then convincing them that the system is their only protection and salvation.

So our lives have been a series of set ups, usually involving lots of people in different roles (cut outs), with a bigger plan (world domination) at work in the background. In the early 1980s Chris was playing a lot in Portland and Seattle.

1983 Rock and Roll Hell cassette
Trap Records

During 1983, when clubs were closing in Portland and Seattle, Sam and Chris moved to the San Francisco Bay Area, but my recollection is that they decided to move back to Portland after Satyricon opened. They’d come up for a visit and had so much fun in Portland Chris said “let’s move back.” I now think this was all set up ahead of time, that they (the architects of his life) wanted to introduce Chris to Valarie who, even though she was much younger, already had a drug habit, and they also were going to introduce him to heroin. Chris met Valerie through his drummer Sam Henry, and he was introduced to heroin by his bassist at the time, a former member of SF band The Cosmetics, who was at that time driving cab in San Francisco. Chris was actually the last member of that lineup of Napalm Beach to try heroin. That was 1983, the same year Napalm Beach made a record with Greg Sage (Rock and Roll Hell), and drummer Sam Henry’s first serious girlfriend died of a heroin overdose.

Valarie must have returned to Portland with Chris and Sam or followed after them.

In Seattle, both Golden Crown and Gorilla Room/Gorilla Gardens seem to have had issues with under age drinking on the premises. A co-owner of Golden Crown, John Loui was killed along with 12 others in the Wah Mee Massacre, February 19, 1983. The 3bands3bucks calendar for Golden Crown ends after December 1982. It’s a bit chilling that one of the last listed shows is Napalm Beach and Next Exit (12/17/82) and currently the last show listed is Visible Targets (12/31/82).

In Portland, The Met, an all-ages club located where Dante’s is now, closed, I think also in 1983.

It sounds like the similarly named Seattle Metropolis (also sometimes called the Met) had been a favorite of Chris’. It was an all ages space run by Gordon Doucette, Hugo Piottin, and Susan Silver. Silver worked with Jonathan Poneman and later went on to manage Soundgarden, Alice in Chains, and Screaming Trees. She became co-owner of The Crocodile. According to 3bands the last show at Seattle’s Metropolis was March 6, 1984 and featured Alien Sex Fiend from London, with Red Masque and 3 Squirrels From Hell.

Violent Femmes at Mediterranean Tavern - May 18, 1983
Violent Femmes 1983

What I find interesting about this is it is just about exactly when Satyricon started. It’s actually not clear to me exactly when Satyricon made it’s debut as a rock club as I’ve heard a couple of different stories, and it probably depends on what you consider the first show to have been. Was it a Violent Femmes show at Mediterranean Tavern in May 1983? Or was it Theatre of Sheep? Or was it The Jackals? If I had to guess based on trying to remember the dates of reunion shows, I’d guess Satyricon marked their birth date as October 1983. Is it possible there was a link between the closing of Seattle’s Metropolis and the opening of Portland’s Satyricon?

In 2002 I made and updated a website for Satyricon and then around 2005 or 2006 I created a MySpace fan page for the club which had shut down after 20 years, in 2003. One of the things that several old-timers mentioned on that MySpace page was the song “I Walk The Line” by Alien Sex Fiend as being “the favorite song” on the Satyricon jukebox. I’d never heard of the band or the song before. In any case Satyricon soon became Chris’ new favorite haunt and place to play, and from what I can tell, for several years he headlined there twice a month, and drew calendars for Satyricon and advertisements for Taki’s Souvlakis next door. Chris played other clubs around Portland and Seattle as well, as well as the occasional festival and/or small town gig, but it looks to me like Chris was playing fewer shows in Seattle after the 1983 transition period, and especially after 1988, especially if you compare to how prolific he was in the early 1980s. Under normal circumstances, someone who was doing what Chris was doing as well as he was doing it would have caught the interest of a label somewhere. But there was already a plan for Chris, as there was for me, and both plans were basically a series of traps, along with, it appears, plans/intents/set ups intended to harm us and endanger our lives. I believe that Sub Pop took advantages of opportunities that presented themself within this context. Specifically, in order for them to be successful with their selected group of artists, they would have to help make sure Chris and I stayed put, stayed on track. In order to do that, it seems that everyone around us – friends, family, etc – was instructed/bribed/coerced to keep us in certain locations, and out of other locations – but not to be obvious about all of this. So there is tempting bait (Satyricon as sort of an ad hoc family and artists playground), enticing us to stay close to home, along with messaging warning us away from moves towards financial/professional success. It was a pattern of luring, honey traps, sabotage, psychological warfare. The idea was to make our failures seem like bad luck or our own fault. Meanwhile, terrible reports are sold in hopes that FBI/CIA black bag ops will retaliate with assassinations, because apparently, that’s what they do. It does seem like there are people in these communities who habitually and maybe even as a tradition pick out people (or offer up people) to be marked for death. Audacity is one way the crime hides – the idea being that the nature of the crime is so audacious, no one will believe your story.

Napalm Beach 1987

So 1983 was a very transitional year, and it was a year in which a number of personalities who would appear later, associated with grunge, were becoming established.

One question would be, did the establishment of Club Satyricon in late 1983 have something to do with the origins of Sub Pop and possibly also K Records? And I think that the answer is yes, especially with regards to Sub Pop. What I think was happening is that Sub Pop was making deals specifically at Chris’ expense, and at my expense as well. And while following the money would be ideal, if you can’t see the money, you can see the flow of wealth in the form of material goods and other benefits, and even more so, you can see the matching of dates and movement of people in key positions at key moments. Generally speaking, I think Satyricon served both as a holding cell for Chris, and a transition point for Seattle bands making their moves down the coast and beyond.

A lifetime of traps and set ups

When Chris was working on his memoirs, some of it was focused around music, and a lot of it was focused around relationships, growing up, and processing the eight-year period in which he was living on the streets. He worked on this document off and on between 2010 and 2014, then seemed to stop pretty suddenly around the time of the Napalm Beach article, associated freak outs, and me being kidnapped. I was introducing the idea that nothing had been quite as it seemed, meanwhile everyone else was telling Chris I had gone crazy.

It is a really weird thing, as an older person, to suddenly realize that your entire life was at some level, treated as a farce. That the things you had worked so hard to achieve had never been available to you not because you didn’t try hard enough, and not because you had bad luck, but because of an extensive fraud situation which everyone you loved and trusted was keeping secret. Under the best of circumstances, it would be a lot to process, and these were hardly the best of circumstances. I know that I personally was feeling devasted by the betrayals throughout 2014. This was long before I knew anything about the ongoing medical malfeasance (surveillance, biomedical abuse, and murders), which in a lot of ways is the worst part of this.

Going deeper into the research – also with more information now available online – it occurs to me that our life stories could be told as a series of set ups, some more consequential than others. In both of our cases some of the most consequential set ups revolved around honey traps and music. In Chris case there were also a lot of consequential set ups around drug use (this includes alcohol, obviously).

Damage wrought by the use of honey traps cannot be over-emphasized. These are not James Bond style honey traps who seductively introduce themselves into an adult world of espionage games – I was introduced to honey traps, probably going back at least to 1983 when I was 15 years old. I believe my parents participated in this, knowingly, but I don’t know why. And then, when I was barely 16, I started to go out with Mike Payne who was well over 21. In these early relationships, you’re still learning about the world, and about how to be in a relationship, so they are very formative. So I was very young, being influenced by a honey trap – a man I thought was madly in love with me, wanted to marry me, etc – and the whole time he was involved in trafficking me through medical and surveillance networks, with the intent to betray me. The relationship went on almost five years, but it sounds like he has continued to covertly have influence.

In some ways Chris was even more vulnerable to influence than me, in part because he had an open, suggestible personality, but also because he had been raised in a sheltered evangelical church family where there was no drug or alcohol use. Not being exposed to any kind of alcohol use growing up can make a person more vulnerable to negative influences later on, because there is no measuring stick to understand what normal social drinking looks like. Chris’ first live-in girlfriend, Kim Pettit, seems to have been an alcoholic. Her habits influenced Chris. Also, Chris was exposed to an absolutely insane amount of drug use in the 1970s. I have never in my life met anyone who was exposed to more drugs than he was.

Mike Payne also seemed to be an alcoholic when he lived with me, but somehow immediately became cured after we broke up. The people who were around me at this time, including Mike, seemed to have been part of a plan to separate me from my guitars, from music scenes, from anyone involved in music, and to get me stuck in Minneapolis. My mother was also part of this.

Where I really wanted to be – going back to 1984 – was Seattle or Olympia. I really liked Seattle and the Puget Sound area where my dad had grown up, and where I’d been born.

There was a period of time around 1986-87 where I was living with Mike in Humboldt County and he was getting close to graduating with an art degree, and he was talking about going to graduate school at the University of Washington, which of course I was on board with. Somehow that all fell by the wayside, and I found myself out of work, on the outs with my family, unable to support myself, literally going hungry, with Mike still drinking every night. Being as we were living together, it doesn’t make sense to me now how he could afford to drink when I couldn’t afford to eat.

That’s when I allowed my family to send me to college in St Paul, Minnesota. I asked if I could go to Evergreen State College in Washington and was told I could not, because of out of state tuition costs. With nothing else on the horizon, I allowed my mother to send me to Hamline University. It seems like it all happened fast. I don’t know when the decision was made, but it must have been sometime after June 1987, and I was back in Minnesota by the following August.

The thing that makes this so difficult to comprehend right now is that my family – and Chris’ family – had to know that within the realm in which we were operating – Chris and I belonged together. So why did they try to keep us apart?

Sweet Young Thing (Ain’t Sweet No More)

journal entry from 7 July 1987
journal entry from 7 July 1987 – Mike Payne was regularly going out to bars, leaving me alone, coming home after closing, drunk, vomiting in the toilet. My mother had given me the calcium vitamins.

“Sweet Young Thing” was originally a song by the Monkees (1966)


I know that something very strange
Has happened to my brain
I’m either feeling very good
Or else I am insane
The seeds of doubt you planted
Have started to grow wild
And I feel that I must yield
Before the wisdom of a child


And it’s love you bring
No, that I can’t deny
And with your wings
I can learn to fly
Sweet young thing

(Mike Payne was born in 1961. His father and I think his grandfather were pilots.)

Vanishing Point (in reverse)

7 Jan 2014 blog comment "you're insane"
January 7, 2014 Introducing Napalm Beach blog comment

“Stop taking so many drugs and seek therapy to relieve yourself from your poison idea that, somehow, your boyfriend is the subject of some bizarre conspiracy.

No one buried Chris (Newman), except Chris himself. He is a loser and so are you.”
Mudhoney - Vanishing Point - 2013
2 April 2013- Mudhoney – Vanishing Point – released (image on front is Roman Forum?)
Vanishing Point (movie) title screen showing Shell gas station
March 13, 1971 Vanishing Point (the movie)
Vanishing Point (movie) screen reading "Barry Newman"
starring Barry Newman

Untouchables / Napalm Beach shows in Seattle 1980-83

This is a distillation of some of the information recently published on a blog called Three Bands, Three Bucks: Seattle Clubs That Rocked 1980-95

Although it seems to be an ongoing project and not an exhaustive list, one thing I noticed is a drop off in frequency of Napalm Beach being booked in Seattle after 1989. Eric Danielson has also indicated that Napalm Beach, at least to him, seemed to “disappear” after their first European tour in November 1989. Although I’ve been critical of Danielson’s fact checking, this was a personal experience observation.

I now suspect that the disappearing was by design.

Information on the website also confirms what Chris had told me back in 2010 when he talked about his history playing in the northwest – that most small and mid-sized rock clubs seemed to close down in 1982. This happened in Seattle and Portland simultaneously. That is when Chris moved briefly to the San Francisco Bay Area, which is where he met Valarie, whom he would later marry. It is also where he was introduced to heroin. For various reasons I suspect all of that too, was by design.

When the Satyricon got running in 1983, 84 – Chris moved back to Portland. For many years Napalm Beach would headline at Satyricon at least twice a month, once with Snow Bud and once with Napalm Beach. Napalm Beach and Snow Bud also played many other clubs in Portland and Seattle, and occasionally elsewhere.

Untouchables started playing around Portland and Seattle in 1980. They changed their name to Napalm Beach in August 1981. Untouchables/Napalm Beach shows in Seattle before 1983 included

The Wrex (1980-82)

1981

March 21 – Untouchables
May 8-9 – Untouchables, X-15, Tiny HolesJuly 15 – Untouchables
July 17 – Untouchables, Crisis, Spectators
July 18 – Untouchables, Spectators
August 5-6 – Untouchables
August 9 – Untouchables, Executives
October 8-10 – Napalm Beach, Grey Matter
October 31 – Napalm Beach, Visible Targets, Sleeping Movement
November 14 – X, Napalm Beach
December 11 – Napalm Beach
December 12 – Napalm Beach, Visible Targets

1982

February 5 – The Untouchables
February 19 – The Fleshtones, Napalm Beach

The Wrex closed in March 1982, re-opening in January 1983 as The Vogue. The last published show was on February 20 and it was The Fleshtones with Blackouts.

The Showbox

1981

May 30 – Rescue The Rock Of The ’80s Spring Collection w/Untouchables, RPA, Nouveau Cliche
August 30 – Save The Gorilla Room Benefit w/The Enemy, Napalm Beach, Student Nurse, Spectators, Rapid-I, the Executives, DT’s, the Deans, Scizzors, Shatterbox, Fastbacks, the Rats, Joe Despair & the Future

Gorilla Room calendar July 1981
Gorilla Room calendar July 1981

1982

May 9 – KCMU Benefit – Visible Targets, Three Swimmers, Napalm Beach
September 26 – KCMU Benefit – The Cowboys, 54/40, Life In General, Napalm Beach, The Frazz, Pamona Boners
November 12 – Public Image Ltd., Napalm Beach

Gorilla Room (1980-81)

1980

December 12-13 – The Untouchables, Casey Nova

1981

February 27 – Red Dress, Untouchables
February 28 – The Enemy, Untouchables
April 28 – Cowboys, Untouchables
April 29 – Untouchables
April 30 – Untouchables, Skinny Ties
May 26 – The Cowboys, Untouchables
July 16 – Executives, Untouchables (this entry is missing from the website)
July 18 – Untouchables

With regards to the end of the Gorilla Room, the website states “On July 23rd, 1981, the PI noted that the Washington State Liquor Board ordered a month-long closure of the Gorilla Room due to numerous minor violations.” The club was given a number of sanctions and never re-opened.

August 1981 is when Untouchables changed their name to Napalm Beach. My 2013 version of story (relayed from Chris) was: “Napalm Beach closed down the Gorilla Room. The place was packed and everything and everyone was sloshing under a layer of beer. They partied until they passed out onstage. That was the end of the Gorilla Room.”

It sounds like the violations had to do with minors drinking on the premises. My notes state that “Underage patrons found onsite included Duff McKagan and Chuck Biscuits.”

Baby O’s (1980-82)

1981

August 7-8 – Untouchables
September 2-5 – Untouchables

1982

May 14-15 – No Cheese Please, Napalm Beach
June 18-19 – Hi-Fi, Napalm Beach

Golden Crown (1979-83)

1982

June 12 – Visible Targets, Napalm Beach
July 16 – Beat Pagodas, Napalm Beach
July 30-31 – 54/40, Napalm Beach
August 20-21 – Toiling Midgets, Napalm Beach
September 17-18 – Napalm Beach, Life In General, Rally Go
November 26 – Napalm Beach, Student Nurse, LeMax
December 17 – Napalm Beach, Next Exit

The site states “On February 19th, 1983, Golden Crown co-owner John Loui was killed along with 12 others in the infamous Wah Mee Massacre. Loui had sold his interest in the club before his death, but it is unclear if his partners, The Woos, were still part of the ownership at this time.

To be continued.